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Piano Sonata No 3 in F minor, Op 5

Introduction

The Third Piano Sonata in F minor was completed in October 1853 and represents the culmination of this first and only phase of piano sonata composition. It has both the variety and length of the expansive Sonata in F sharp minor Op 2, yet also the more concise thematic processes of the Sonata in C major (published as Op 1, but composed second). Yet it also represents a new stage in which the sonata medium is now used almost symphonically in both pianistic texture and musical content. Brahms’s next piano work would be a sonata for two pianos, soon orchestrated as a symphony, which, though never completed, provided material for the first movement for the Piano Concerto in D minor and the funeral march of the German Requiem.

The first movement of the F minor Sonata has much the same feeling as this funeral march, the same sense of an unfolding drama enacted in a heavy 3/4 tempo which gains its force and character, if not from a single theme, then from a family of related rhythms and thematic shapes that dominate the entire movement. Though the outer form is straightforward, with a more-or-less literal recapitulation of the exposition and clear development and coda sections, the recurrent features give the movement an inexorable sense of growth—from the widely flung gestures of the opening, through the dour march that follows, the lyrical second theme with flowing accompaniment in A flat/D flat major, and even the ethereal reflections marked ‘pp dolce’ then ‘misterioso’ that preface the return of the opening.

That ethereal quality anticipates the mood of the ‘Andante espressivo’ slow movement (though it was composed earlier, as was its abbreviated recall as the fourth movement, marked ‘Rückblick’—‘Retrospect’). At least the first of these movements is apparently based on a poem, ‘Junge Liebe’ by C O Sternau, the opening of which Brahms adds at the head of his score, though noting only the poet, not the source.

Twilight falls, the moonlight shines, Two hearts are united in love, and keep themselves in bliss enclosed.

Brahms reflects this text in the mirroring of his intimate descending upper melody in the lower voice and by the atmospheric ‘ben cantando’ passage that follows, with its delicate gently repeated notes and almost unearthly chordal spacings in the upper register. But the mood changes. The passionate intensity to which the middle section grows from its ‘extremely soft and sweet’ opening in the new key of D flat major certainly suggests more than just an idyllic scene, especially when the repetition of the opening section in the tonic is followed by a seemingly new ‘Andante molto’, again in D flat and beginning ppp, which effects a huge coda that rises to triumphant intensity, the movement’s opening phrase reappearing in the final ‘Adagio’. Comparison with the second and third strophes of Sternau’s poem seems to confirm the source of this intensity, with its imagery of prolonged affection through a thousand kisses and of enraptured bliss lasting until dawn. (Indeed, a quite separate song by Friedrich Silcher has even been suggested as prompting the opening melodic shape and expressive character of the distinctive final section, a love song at midnight—‘steh’ ich in finst’rer Mitternacht’.)

The fourth movement ‘Andante molto’, now in the relative minor key to D flat, B flat minor, recalls the opening idea of the earlier movement as the basis of a funeral march with ominous timpani effects. This in turn has been attributed to a source in another of Sternau’s poems, ‘Bitte’ (‘Request’), that Brahms also noted for setting, though he does not identify it in his score; here, in contrast, the poet tells rather of a love grown cold like a withered tree or a barren forest. The title ‘Intermezzo’ is Brahms’s own and perhaps indicates its role in separating the third from the fifth movement (unless, that is, it is retained from an earlier context, a conception apart from the sonata), thus casting the scherzo as the central, rather than penultimate movement of the work.

With this scherzo, back in the tonic, the music now reveals a more uninhibited character than at any preceding point: the marking ‘Allegro energico’ signifies a sense of huge muscular swing and release of pent-up energy. In total contrast is the trio, again emphasizing D flat major, with its broad, tranquil, almost hymnic melody that steadily expands its range and strength until it can reincorporate the rhythm of the scherzo for its restatement.

The huge musical stature of the young Brahms is nowhere more clearly revealed than in his capacity to create a finale that both crowns and unifies the mighty contrasts that precede it. His chosen form is a rondo, where large contrasts complement the detailed working of ideas—the same principle of the contrast of the scherzo and the trio, yet here taken a step further. Like that of the first movement, the opening is not straightforward, but blends thematic statement with a sense of introduction, here rhythmically tense and anticipatory in character, waiting to explode into action. The first contrasting theme is in F major, and is surely a tribute to Brahms’s first great musician friend, met earlier in 1853, the violinist Joachim, being based on his thematic motto F-A-E (‘Frei aber Einsam’). The return of the opening takes on something of the ethereal aspects of the earlier movements before the original course is resumed. But this is no symmetrical rondo. The second contrasting theme now dominates what follows. Beginning in D flat major, now clearly established as the secondary tonality to F minor, rather than the more usual relative major key of A flat, a broad cumulative melody—a successor to the trio theme—permeates the recall of the first theme and finally becomes the subject of a two-stage coda, a coda to the work as well as to the movement; the theme even appears as an accompaniment to itself in shorter notes, in a feat of rhythmic excitement in the tonic major that represents the complete antithesis of the struggle with which the work began.

Recordings

‘Thoughtful, poetic and rich-toned readings of youthful Brahms. These pieces [Four Ballades] emerge as little gems, the songful Second as ear-catching ...‘[Hough’s] new disc must be one of the current prime choices in these pieces’ (International Record Review)» More

'Here’s something a little bit special to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Percy Grainger … Grainger was a charismatic pianist and a ...'The best of Grainger’s shellac efforts retain their vividness and communicative immediacy. Even if Grainger had never met and befriended Grieg, his i ...» More